Saudi Arabia plans new initiative to boost industrial activities

Saudi Arabia Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef attends the closing ceremony of an industrial incubator program that concluded in Riyadh. SPA
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Updated 03 January 2024
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Saudi Arabia plans new initiative to boost industrial activities

RIYADH: Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is planning to launch a new initiative to further support the growth of small and medium enterprises and boost the country’ industrial sector.

This was revealed by Minister of Industry and Mineral Resources Bandar Alkhorayef at an event in Riyadh on Sunday.

The minister said the initiative will provide entrepreneurs and innovators with promising opportunities for growth and expansion in various industrial activities.

Speaking at the closing ceremony of an industrial business accelerator and incubator initiative, Alkhorayef said support through the initiative will not be limited just to industrial activities but will be extended to the services and logistics sectors as well, the Saudi Press Agency reported.

He said the Kingdom’s industrial strategy aims to increase the base of mature and innovative small and medium industrial companies, enabling them to compete globally.

Industrial SMEs constitutes about 92 percent of the total number of industrial facilities, representing 34 percent of the total investment volume and employing 55 percent of the workforce in the sector.

Furthermore, the top official said the recently concluded accelerator and incubator initiative called Nomu reflected the ministry’s commitment to introducing programs that contribute to enabling innovations and emerging projects.

It also aims to enable SMEs in the industrial sector and provide a conducive environment for industrial entrepreneurs, he added.

Nomu has achieved significant success since the Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources invited entrepreneurs to register in May last year.

It attracted 17 quality industrial projects from Saudi industrial pioneers. The incubator serves as an entity that nurtures businesses, generates ideas, and assists in the establishment and accelerated growth of SMEs.

Incubators focus mainly on entrepreneurs in the early stages, and provide short-term programs, consultations, training, and optional financial support.

In August, the official spokesperson for the ministry, Jarrah bin Muhammad Al-Jarrah, said the initiatives fall in line with Vision 2030 and the National Industrial Strategy to expand the industrial base of Saudi Arabia and promote SMEs and enable them to compete globally.


Private sector dynamism driving labor market growth in Saudi Arabia, landmark report says

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Private sector dynamism driving labor market growth in Saudi Arabia, landmark report says

RIYADH: A “structural shift” in the Saudi economy has led to the share of citizens employed in the private sector reaching 52.8 percent, surpassing the 51.4 percent target, according to a landmark report.

Prepared in collaboration with the Global Labor Market Conference, World Bank Group and the Kingdom’s Ministry of Human Resources and Social Development, the release titled “A Decade of Progress,” offers an analytical overview of the nation’s job market transformation over the past decade. 

Figures as of the second quarter of 2025 showed the Kingdom was not only ahead of its target for the year for the share of Saudis working in the private sector, but only 5.5 percentage points away from the Saudi Vision 2030 goal of 58.3 percent. 

The analysis also highlights a structural shift in the role of the private sector in Saudi Arabia’s job market, particularly among women.

Strengthening the private sector and enhancing women’s participation in the workforce is a crucial goal outlined in the Kingdom’s Vision 2030 agenda, as the nation is steadily pursuing its economic diversification efforts by reducing its dependence on crude revenues. 

“The private sector is now one of the driving forces behind new job growth in Saudi Arabia, in line with its economic diversification vision. Employment ratios increased as inactive individuals moved into jobs, driving a notable drop in Saudi unemployment and expanding the productive workforce,” said Cristobal Ridao-Cano, practice manager for social protection and labor in the Middle East and North Africa, Pakistan, and Afghanistan at the World Bank. 

He added: “The knowledge attained from Saudi Arabia’s transformation model can be transferred to other countries.” 

The Kingdom has the goal of increasing the share of Saudi citizens employed in the private sector to 58.3 percent by the end of this decade. 

According to the report, the share of employment in micro-enterprises increased from 6 percent in 2015 to 26 percent of total employment by 2025, underscoring the sector’s vitality.

This improvement was supported by a sustained decline in labor market mismatch over the decade, and an increase in education-to-job matching from 41 percent in 2015 to 62 percent in 2025, reducing skills-related barriers to employment. 

“Labor market frictions also declined, reflected in a notable rise in job-to-job transitions and increased labor mobility toward private sector firms,” added the study. 

According to the analysis, the Kingdom witnessed a notable expansion in the productive labor force, driven by an increase in participation to 67.1 percent by 2025. 

Saudi Arabia’s overall unemployment rate recorded a significant decline, reaching 2.8 percent by mid-2025, as increasing numbers of economically inactive individuals moved directly into occupations. 

Female employment increased from 11 percent in 2015 to 32 percent in 2025, while work among mothers rose from 8 percent to 45 percent over the same period.

The employment rate in the category of youth, aged between 18 and 24, increased from 10 percent in 2015 to 33 percent in 2025, while the share of youth not in education, employment, or training declined from 40 percent to 25 percent during the same period. 

The report also highlighted a significant shift in social norms and job search preferences. 

From 2015 to 2025, the share of individuals unwilling to work declined from 49 percent to 12 percent, while the preference gap between the public and private sectors narrowed considerably. 

The share of jobseekers who were exclusively seeking public sector jobs fell from 60 percent to 10 percent for men, and from 48 percent to 22 percent for women.

A large share of jobseekers now target private sector opportunities, reflecting stronger alignment between work preferences and actual job search behavior. 

“Social norms related to women’s employment also shifted substantially. Acceptance of women working in mixed-gender workplaces has increased, directly contributing to higher female employment in private sector companies, expanding opportunities available to women, and strengthening their integration into the labor market,” added the report.